Saudi Arabia Has Executed 134 People This Year

Saudi Arabia Has Executed 134 People This Year

PA Images/Max Pixels According to a new report, 134 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia in 20..

PA Images/Max Pixels

According to a new report, 134 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia in 2019 alone.

If the execution rate continues on this trajectory, the death toll for 2019 will exceed all previous recorded totals of executions in the country.

The figures were presented at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, from a report presented by Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, at an event hosted by international legal action charity The Death Penalty Project.

deera squarePA

According to Baroness Kennedys report, titled A Perverse and Ominous Enterprise: The Death Penalty and Illegal Executions in Saudi Arabia, So far this year, the authorities of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (Saudi Arabia) are known to have carried out at least 134 executions. Of these, 37 were political activists killed en masse on 23 April 2019 following lengthy periods of detention in solitary confinement, subjection to torture, and grossly unfair trials.

While in 2018, a total of 149 people were reportedly executed, with 46 still on death row by the end of the year.

The Death Penalty Project says at 24 people are at imminent risk of execution, with prominent political figures, clerics and human rights defenders on the list.

The report also states six of the people executed this year were children at the time of their arrest. Under international law, sentencing someone under the age of 18 to death is illegal.

crown prince of Saudi Arabia at G20 summitPA

Presenting the report to the United Nations Human Rights Council, Baroness Kennedy said:

I have been very concerned about the way in which Jamal Khashoggis murder is being presented to the world as being some sort of rogue activity and not part of systemic human rights abuses inside Saudi Arabia.

The point of this Report is to highlight the extent to which there has been a dramatic escalation of human rights violations by Saudi Arabia. The cruelty of the system is so great… I really hope you will all take this Report to heart, and ensure that something can be done globally.

Jamal Khashoggi was a journalist for The Washington Post and a prominent Saudi dissident. The exact circumstances of his death are unknown, though it is alleged he was murdered in the Saudi consulate in Turkey, in a premeditated attack carried out by Saudi nationals.

jamal khashoggiPA

Baroness Kennedys report states the rise in numbers of executions should be seen in the context of the extrajudicial execution of Khashoggi.

The report also states:

Saudi Arabias recent use of the death penalty should be viewed in the context of systemic and egregious human rights violations, including the widespread use of arbitrary arrest and detention (particularly since late 2017) to target political opponents and silence dissent.

Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin SalmanPA

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